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Massimo Dallamano directed this 1974 film as a pseudo follow-up to What Have You Done to Solange?, a picture he’d made two years prior but this film is far less a traditional giallo than the earlier picture. Rather, the film blends giallo elements with the type of action and high-intensity
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Director Kôyû Ohara has been well served thus far in Impulse Pictures’ Nikkatsu Erotic Films Collection line. All of his entries (reviewed here) have been both entertaining and genuinely sleazy but it’s his 1982 film White Rose Campus: Everyone Gets
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When 'killer kid' movies hit big with American audiences in the seventies, exploitation giants American International Pictures released a trimmed down version of Narciso Ibáñez Serrador's Who Can Kill A Child under the more acceptable title of Island Of The Damned. The film has retained a cult following
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Like a lot of German sexploitation pictures, Erwin C. Dietrich’s 1971 film Blutjunge Verfuhrerinnen 1 – Teil (also known as The Young Seducers, the title used on this DVD release from Full Moon) follows a tried and true formula. When the picture begins, a group of
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Armed with only a camcorder, some Halloween props, a bottle of ketchup and what clearly looked like a distinct lack of adult supervision, Eric Wilkinson and his brother David teamed up with friend Joseph Shaugnessy in the summer of 1988 to bring to the world…. The Violence Movie. Made as a blatant knock off (or homage, if you prefer) of various slasher classics, the picture managed to gain a bit of a
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The movie begins when Sam Phillips (Philip Sayer) disappears right on front of his young son Tony (Simon Nash of Terry Gilliam's Brazil). Three years later, Tony is still dealing with his father's disappearance and he tells his mother, Rachel (Bernice Stegers of Lamberto Bava's Macabro) and her new boyfriend – a high fashion photographer named Joe (Danny Brainin), that his father didn't leave, that he was taken by aliens. Things start to get strange
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After Hours Cinema presents a triple feature of vintage adult films from the mid-seventies taken from vintage 16mm prints found in the archives of the late Venus Theater in Vancouver, British Columbia.

The Abduction Of Lorelei:

First up is this fifty-six minute roughie that starts with the titular Lorelai (Serena) doing her makeup and getting ready for some sort of big even while some music before leaving her abode where she’s spotted by a man and a woman in a white Ford Mustang with a gun. They head after her, watching her start up her rad Lincoln – which has a neat vintage car phone in it that she uses to call her dad before he leaves town to make another million.
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Brett Halsey tops this later period Lucio Fulci film, starring as a financially starved and reasonably psychotic man named Lester Parsons. He needs money to pay off some pretty substantial gambling debts, so to do this he comes up with a scheme: prey on rich,
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Originally intended as a return to form for director Lucio Fulci, Zombie 3 turned out to be… a bit of a mess. Made with a low budget and shot in the Philippines, Fulci’s ailing health caught up with him and the climate didn’t help things. When he submitted an original cut that was ripe with padding and just over an hour
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Co-created by Carol Black and Neal Marlens, The Wonder Years debuted on NBC on January 31, 1988 and the first season lasted only six episodes. The show was, however, a commercial and critical success and it was soon renewed for a full second season that ran seventeen episodes. Following their massive ‘complete series' release from last year, Star Vista is now making individual seasons available on DVD. The complete second series of the show ran from November 30th, 1988 through May 16th, 1989.

For those unfamiliar with the show, it revolved around the exploits of Kevin Arnold (Fred Savage), a kid growing up in the late sixties. Kevin lived at home with his kindly mother Norma (Alley Mills), his surly father Jack (Dan Lauria), his hippie sister Karen (Olivia D'Abo) and his obnoxious older brother Wayne (Jason Hervey). Together they lived
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“The most diabolical device ever contrived... designed solely for carnage by a town of madmen crazed with BLOOD LUST!”

Connie Mason and William Kerwin were cast again in this follow up to Blood Feast, this time playing a couple named Terry and Tom who, while out for a drive, wind up in the small southern town of Pleasant
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In the late seventies and early eighties women in prison films were big business in Italy and playing in grindhouses across the world. They were made fast and cheap and concentrated less on actual storylines than on gratuitous set pieces that served as showcases for explicit sex and violence (often times both at once). In 1983,
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Directed by Norman J. Warren (the same man who did Prey, Inseminoid and Satan's Slave), 1978’s The Terror was released theatrically in the United States by Crown International and was previously released on DVD by Scorpion Releasing.
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In the opening scene, a man named Mark Markson (Michael Pataki) tells a picture of Ricky Nelson that his next song is gonna be a big hit. He gets a phone call and, as we see a woman (Sandi Carey) suck the caller’s
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Directed by Eddie Romero in his native homeland of The Philippines, The Twilight People tells the story of an adventurer named Matt Farrell (played, of course, by Blood Island’s most famous leading man, John Ashley) is
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